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Reservoir Pressure Integral Is Independently Associated With the Reduction in Renal Function in Older Adults

Title: Reservoir Pressure Integral Is Independently Associated With the Reduction in Renal Function in Older Adults
Authors: K Aizawa; AD Hughes; F Casanova; PE Gates; DM Mawson; KM Gooding; M Gilchrist; I Goncalves; J Nilsson; F Khan; HM Colhoun; C Palombo; KH Parker; AC Shore
Publication Year: 2022
Collection: Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR): Figshare
Subject Terms: aging; blood pressure; hemodynamics; kidney
Description: BACKGROUND: Arterial hemodynamic parameters derived from reservoir-excess pressure analysis exhibit prognostic utility. Reservoir-excess pressure analysis may provide useful information about an influence of altered hemodynamics on target organ such as the kidneys. We determined whether the parameters derived from the reservoir-excess pressure analysis were associated with the reduction in estimated glomerular filtration rate in 542 older adults (69.4±7.9 years, 194 females) at baseline and after 3 years. METHODS: Reservoir-excess pressure parameters, including reservoir pressure integral, excess pressure integral, systolic, and diastolic rate constants, were obtained by radial artery tonometry. RESULTS: After 3 years, and in a group of 94 individuals (72.4±7.6 years, 26 females), there was an estimated glomerular filtration rate reduction of >5% per year (median reduction of 20.5% over 3 years). A multivariable logistic regression analysis revealed that higher baseline reservoir pressure integral was independently associated with a smaller reduction in estimated glomerular filtration rate after accounting for conventional cardiovascular risk factors and study centers (odds ratio: 0.660 [95% CIs, 0.494-0.883]; P=0.005). The association remained unchanged after further adjustments for potential confounders and baseline renal function (odds ratio: 0.528 [95% CIs, 0.351-0.794]; P=0.002). No other reservoir-excess pressure parameters exhibited associations with the reduction in renal function. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates that baseline reservoir pressure integral was associated with the decline in renal function in older adults at 3-year follow-up, independently of conventional cardiovascular risk factors. This suggests that reservoir pressure integral may play a role in the functional decline of the kidneys.
Document Type: article in journal/newspaper
Language: unknown
Relation: 10871/130891; https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Reservoir_Pressure_Integral_Is_Independently_Associated_With_the_Reduction_in_Renal_Function_in_Older_Adults/29790239
Availability: https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Reservoir_Pressure_Integral_Is_Independently_Associated_With_the_Reduction_in_Renal_Function_in_Older_Adults/29790239
Rights: All rights reserved
Accession Number: edsbas.28D9F3A5
Database: BASE